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In The Media

The Right Idea | Episode 43: Super Tuesday Reaction with Sherry Sylvester

Brian and Derek have the pleasure of sitting down with TPPF’s Distinguished Senior Fellow Sherry Sylvester to discuss the results of the 2024 Primary Election, from a national, statewide and, local perspective.

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Winners & Losers

Winners, Losers & Drones

Every Friday morning at 8:30 a.m., I join the Cardle & Woolley show, Talk 1370 Radio, in Austin to pick the week’s top Winners & Losers, which has gotten a lot easier since November 5 — just put President-elect Donald Trump at the top of the winners list. Time Magazine has named him Person of the Year, and except for Don Lemon, nobody is quibbling about the choice. Trump has essentially taken over as president, both at home and abroad, and nobody seems unhappy about it. Clearly, the Europeans who showed up at Notre Dame Cathedral last week were pleased to see him — as was the longshoremen’s union he met with earlier today.

Trump’s election has ushered in a new era of optimism — even people who didn’t particularly support him are buoyed by the knowledge that the Biden era is over and things are going to change, finally. Here’s who else made my list:

Winner: Whoever Launched the New Jersey Drones

As of Friday morning, nobody seems to know anything about the drones that have been flying over New Jersey every night for the past month. Granted, New Jersey Republican Congressman Jeff Van Drew says credible sources told him they were launched from an Iranian mothership off the Jersey coast, but the Defense Department quickly shot him down, which is exactly what Van Drew wants to do with the drones. Van Drew is a former Democrat who became a Trump Republican in 2020. Trump’s team was essential in getting him re-elected, so if there are “credible sources” who can back-up the Iranian mothership story, you can bet Trump’s people know about it, too.

Van Drew represents several coastal counties in southern New Jersey, not all that far from Grover’s Mill, the site of the Martian landing in the legendary War of the Worlds radio broadcast that panicked the nation into believing America was under attack from Martians in 1938. That was 86 years ago, but the people of New Jersey will not be fooled again. No one in the Garden State has panicked. They’ve seen this kind of thing before.

Loser: America’s Defense Capabilities

Perhaps folks in New Jersey wouldn’t feel so confident if they’d seen the report from the House Select Committee on China, which estimates that if the United States got into a war with China over Taiwan, we’d run out of anti-ship missiles in a week and long range missiles in a month. No estimates on how we would fare if the Jersey shore were attacked by aliens from outer space, but we are behind China in virtually every aspect of warfare capability. Rebuilding America’s defenses is a top priority of the incoming Trump administration, and if you look at this report, it’s clear that dramatic change can’t come soon enough.

This point was underscored on Wednesday when the Department of Defense released a statement stating that it was dealing with climate change as the top security concern in Africa. The statement precisely captured what is wrong with our national defense effort and why Americans voted for something dramatically different.

Winner: Pete Hegseth Gets Cornyn’s Support

It’s also one reason why prospects for President-elect Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, are now looking up. Momentum for Hegseth rebounded over the last week, with an assist from a number of grassroots and policy groups and a Hegseth pledge to at least one senator that he would stop drinking if he got the job. Texas Sen. John Cornyn said that he would support Hegseth this week. Texas’ other senator, Ted Cruz, had previously announced he would back him. Hegseth is a decorated combat veteran and is clearly committed to getting the Department of Defense back on mission.

Winner: Daniel Penny Found Not Guilty

Daniel Penny’s victory in court was not just a victory for him, it was a victory for the people of New York and for our country, a sign that safety is again a priority for our communities. Penny, who subdued a man on the New York City subway who was threatening to kill his fellow passengers, is a Marine Corps veteran who said his only motivation was to protect others. Penny is white and the man threatening the passengers was African-American so black leaders across the country have condemned the jury, but there’s no indication that most African-Americans feel Penny’s actions were unjust. An African-American woman who was on the train during the trial testified in his support, noting that most of the passengers on the train were also minorities.

Loser: Sen. Elizabeth Warren on UnitedHealthcare CEO Assassination

In response to the heinous murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren stated that while violence was never the answer, she understood the murderer’s frustration, having lost faith in the government to solve the health care problem. As the National Review noted, her fellow Democratic Sen. John Fetterman did not feel the need to issue a nuanced statement: “He’s the a**hole that’s going to die in prison,” Fetterman said. The Pennsylvania senator also called the murder “vile,” noting that Thompson leaves behind two children who will grow up without a father.

Loser: “Gender-Affirming Care”

The Washington Post reported this week that so-called LGBTQ+ people are shrinking in fear of what will happen to them once the Trump administration comes in. This story, like many of its ilk, conflates the concerns of the transgender community with gay rights. Several of Trump’s major donors are prominent in the gay community and he just appointed Scott Bessant, who is gay, as Treasury Secretary.

What Trump has pledged to end is the practice of allowing gender-confused children to be prescribed puberty blockers or be subjected to sex-change surgery — so-called “gender-affirming care.” It has nothing to do with gay rights. Britain announced this week that it is banning puberty blockers altogether, following the path of most of Western Europe, which has long acknowledged the danger and ineffectiveness of drug treatments and surgery to treat gender confusion. Britain’s action hasn’t convinced Democrats in Congress, 140 of whom voted against the National Defense Reauthorization Act yesterday because the bill would prohibit the military from providing puberty blockers and other “gender-affirming care” to military kids. Perhaps if those Democrats knew that we’d run out of anti-ship missiles in a week if we have to fight with China about Taiwan, they’d have put the need for more weapons ahead of puberty blockers.

Winner: U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace Takes Stands on Women’s Privacy

Before we leave the topic of gender confusion, we need to acknowledge U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-South Carolina, who was accosted this week by a transgender activist because she has insisted that women’s bathrooms in the nation’s capital be used exclusively by women. Public restrooms exclusively for women have been a key factor for women’s equality throughout history. Before public restrooms were available for women, we were unable to work or participate in community life. Mace is a hero for recognizing that to ensure women’s privacy and safety, we can’t turn our bathrooms over to men. Texas is also mobilizing to reinstate restrictions on men using women’s restrooms.

Winner: Webb County and Judge Tano Tijerina

Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina announced this week that he will become a Republican, reflecting the political change in Texas border counties, which voted overwhelmingly in support of Trump in November. Webb County, which has been reliably Democrat for 100 years, is anchored by Laredo. The fact that this major border city was forced to experience the negative impact of President Joe Biden’s open-border policies clearly had an impact on voters. Judge Tijerina made the right move.

Loser: The Progressive Shoulders Greg Cesar Stands On

The Wall Street Journal published a piece this week musing on the career of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who suggests he may retire in 2031. Throughout his 50 years in politics, Sanders has, among other things, been an apologist for brutal communist regimes in Soviet Russia and elsewhere. Sanders noted that when he was first elected to Congress, he founded the Progressive Caucus with only five people. Last week, the Progressive Caucus, which now numbers more than 100, selected Austin Congressman Greg Casar as its new head, proudly placing him on Sanders’ shoulders. Casar will be carrying out Sanders’ tradition of supporting despots, just like his predecessor, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Washington, who has vigilantly praised the Hamas terrorists while calling Israel a racist state. After his selection, Casar held his first press conference with Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minnesota, by his side. Recall that Omar characterized September 11 as a time when “some people did some things.” Fellow progressive Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Michigan, who accused President Joe Biden of genocide last year, was also there.

Loser: Norway is Worse than California

As Fredrik Haga explains in this great Free Press article, 100 of Norway’s top taxpayers have left in the past two years, taking half the country’s wealth with them. To stanch the flow, Norway is now imposing a 38% exit tax on the market value of your assets. Even California hasn’t thought of introducing an exit tax to make it too expensive for people to leave.

One tax policy that is bankrupting Norwegians is an “unrealized gains tax” on all your assets, even if you didn’t sell them. Vice President Kamala Harris had an “unrealized gains tax” on her wish list, had she been elected. That’s one more reason we can be thankful she was not.

Drones have also been spotted in New York and Pennsylvania, but so far, we’ve not seen one blinking light in the sky in Texas. Keep your eyes peeled, and have a great weekend!

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.

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Sherry Sylvester Show

The Sherry Sylvester Show | Episode 20: Restoring the City on a Hill with Chris Sinacola

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with Director of Communications and Media at the Pioneer Institute Chris Sinacola to discuss how bad history and civics education in our schools have become and what we can do to turn it around.

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Sherry Sylvester Show

The Sherry Sylvester Show | Episode 19: Healing Society and Ourselves with Alexandra Hudson

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with author Alexandra Hudson to discuss how we might return to civil discourse one person at a time.

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9th & Congress

Americans are United in Opposing DEI

Most date the campus launch of the notorious “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” (DEI) ideology to 2010, with a hyper-escalation in 2020, although its roots go back to the late 60s when socialists created it on college campuses. Until now, the trajectory has always been up.

However, in the last year, DEI has been exposed to business as a huge profit loser by Dylan Mulvaney, Target and most recently the demise of Sports Illustrated after they started putting men pretending to be women on their covers.

On college campuses, the congressional testimony of the three Ivy League presidents showed DEI for what it is: progressive sanctioned racism that denigrates the autonomy of the individual in favor of collective identities linked to the immutable characteristics of race and gender.

Texas’ anti-DEI law, Senate Bill 17, continues to make national news because it is the strongest legislation of its kind in the nation. Texas parents feel safer sending their children to taxpayer funded campuses because the DEI offices have ostensibly been closed. But almost none of the hundreds of people who ran those offices in colleges and universities across the state have been fired, so we can assume they are still spewing phony DEI nonsense from their new perches as Vice President of Belonging, or some other such Sesame Street name.

Dr. Hal Atkins recently noted in the Wall Street Journal that “DEI is down but not out.” The goal of DEI is to convince white Americans that they are all racist, whether they know it or not, and they want black and brown Americans to believe that they are all victims. It’s a $6 billion industry that is not going to go away quietly.

DEI is purposefully never clearly defined by the left, but new polling shows that Americans know it when they see it — and they don’t like it.

When asked if they would like their company to hire and promote individuals based on race, gender or sexually based categories, 66% of all Americans  said no, including 54% of Democrats, 71% of Independents and 76% of Republicans.

Of course, DEI zealots have a poll too that shows just the opposite. A poll was referenced in the New York Times late last month that insisted a majority (56%) of those surveyed by Pew in February 2023, said that “focusing on increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace is mainly a good thing. Only 16% thought it was mainly a bad thing.”

What the New York Times didn’t report is that the same poll shows that people clearly don’t know what DEI is. Diversity, equity and inclusion sound good, but digging deeper into the data is the point in the same poll. 68% of Americans don’t want hiring or university admissions to be determined by race or gender or any kind of sexual identity group. They want fair and open merit-based selection processes in all things. This is a benchmark principle for a bipartisan majority of Americans.

So what will DEI advocates do now that Claudine Gay has been exposed as a plagiarizing hack (who probably wasn’t qualified to be president of Harvard) and Dylan Mulvaney (who is definitely not qualified to be a woman) is driven back to counting her Twitter (X) followers? How will the DEI industry fight back?

A recent front page of the New York Times makes it clear that even after DEI advocates have been exposed as frauds, their strategy will remain the same – demonize and insist that all opposition to DEI is not substantive, just political. The Times attacks Texas Republican leadership for the DEI law, demonizing rather than addressing whether DEI programs are discriminatory and divisive.

I have frequently noted that I have yet to hear a DEI advocate provide examples proving that DEI has been effective in increasing minority recruitment, either in business or in academic institutions, or improving student performance or outcomes on college campuses. No one is providing evidence of success (and tons of evidence is showing it is harmful), but the pro-DEI crowd ignores that question too.

Americans oppose DEI because it promulgates a race-based ideology that pits students – and all Americans — against each other based on their ancestors. It creates guilt in those who have done no wrong and exonerates others from responsibility for their lives.

But DEI is also something much worse: a war against civilization. Viewing the world through the DEI ideology requires pronouncing virtually everything that humans have accomplished since time began as the result of white supremacy, racism or colonialism.  It rejects the principles of individual freedom and autonomy, science, research, advancement, inquiry and discovery. Their worldview is a dark place where everything humans value is proclaimed to be bad and everything human decency condemns as bad is said to be good.

That’s how thousands of DEI indoctrinated students could continue to flood into the streets to support terrorists who are attempting to wipe Jews off the face of the earth. This barbaric madness and other actions like it will continue until DEI is ended.

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.  

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Sherry Sylvester Show

The Sherry Sylvester Show | Ep 2: Fighting the Good Fight with Texas State Senator Paul Bettencourt

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with Texas State Senator Paul Bettencourt to discuss the importance of steadfastly standing against harmful ideologies such as Marxism and Socialism.

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In The Media

Sherry Sylvester Discusses Texas’ Anti-DEI Law (S.B. 17) on Lone Star Politics

TPPF Distinguished Senior Fellow Sherry Sylvester explains the intentions of Texas Senate Bill 17, which bans Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) from public higher education institutions.

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9th & Congress

Harvard’s Claudine Gay and DEI in Texas

Pushing out Claudine Gay as president of Harvard may be the biggest academic rejection in American history since Cotton Mather was passed over for the same job in 1702 because of his participation in the Salem Witch Trials. That said, many people do not realize that Gay is still at Harvard as a professor earning $900,000 annually, even though she has not recanted her anti-Semitic statements or apologized to the people she plagiarized. Instead, she essentially called those who criticized her a bunch of racists.

In Texas, the infamous congressional hearing occurred just as Texas academic institutions were rolling out their plans for compliance with Senate Bill 17, the anti-DEI bill that passed in the 2023 Legislative Session and went into effect on January 1.

UT Regent Kevin Eltife made a heroic statement to usher in the end of “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” programs at the University of Texas at Austin:

“We really want to make something crystal clear, whether you like the policy or whether you like this law or any other law, the University of Texas System is going to respect the process, and we’re going to respect the law. We’re not going to look for loopholes. We’re not going to look for workarounds. We’re going to implement the law as passed.”

Texas A&M University posted a website message that states:

“As Texas A&M University prepares to comply with Texas Senate Bill 17 regarding diversity, equity and inclusion programs at public universities, staff members previously supporting the Office for Diversity have been reassigned, and this office is closed. The university is transitioning S.B. 17-compliant programs and resources previously offered by the Office for Diversity to other areas of the university and discontinuing programs that are not compliant.”

Here’s how the anti-DEI ban is working on Texas campuses so far: The San Antonio Express-News reported that a campus-wide working group sifted through about 300 “DEI programming items” at the University of Texas at San Antonio and decided that only 10% of the items would be stopped. The president of UTSA did say that the school would not repurpose its Office of Inclusive Excellence.

“300 DEI programming items” gives us an idea of the scope of DEI on that campus. And what exactly is “Inclusive Excellence?” Does that mean everybody gets an “A” like they do at Harvard?

Meaningless naming designed to obscure the true ideology is a critical component of the DEI playbook. On Texas campuses, word salad office names and titles are being exchanged for different word salad office names and titles.

The University of Texas at Austin’s Division of Diversity and Community Engagement will now become the Division of Campus and Community Engagement.

The Multicultural Center and Pride Alliance at the University of North Texas will now become the Center for Belonging and Engagement. The president of the University of Texas at Dallas admitted that the programs will continue under a different name.

Everyone knew the Pride Center at College Station wasn’t for most A&M students, so now they are going to call it the Student Life Center.

It’s not clear what the former “Pride Center” did at A&M, but at the University of North Texas, some are lamenting that without the Pride Center there will be no place for students to go to get “‘binders’ which women use to smash their breasts so they look like men. According to one staffer, other ‘gender affirming supplies’ are also likely to disappear along with designated spaces for queer students and students of color.”

“Designated spaces for students of color?” Sounds a lot like the back of the bus.

The five employees who worked at the LGBTQA Resource Center and the Center for Diversity and Inclusion at the University of Houston will now be working for the Center for Student Advocacy and Community.

Texas Tech University and San Jacinto College simply closed their DEI offices to comply with Senate Bill 17.  On behalf of the conservative majority of Texas, who overwhelmingly oppose the ideology of DEI and who elected the legislators who passed the anti-DEI legislation, we thank you.

We may not quickly know what Texas academic institutions are doing with the hundreds of DEI employees, DEI focused committees and so-called “DEI programming items” that have become embedded within the universities because many have not reported their deployment of DEI personnel and programs. A professor at Texas A&M School of Nursing recently characterized requests for public information from the American Accountability Foundation as “harassment.”

Other campuses are in hysterics over SB 17. UT professors and administrators are telling the Austin American Statesman that the anti-DEI legislation has resulted in profound “confusion and despair” and morale is at an all-time low. Faculty members say they are exhausted.

And, of course, Pavitra Kumar, a student at the University of Texas at Austin, actually went on the record to say that no one is talking to students to ask what they would feel “safe and comfortable with.”

Kumar seems blithely unaware that when college students across the country hit the streets to support the terrorists who attacked Israel on Oct. 7, including at the University of Texas, nobody asked the Jewish students what they’d feel “safe and comfortable with.”

DEI programs at Texas universities employ hundreds of people and cost millions of dollars. The Texas Legislature passed an anti-DEI ban because those programs foment hate and division, and have had no impact in attracting larger numbers of minority and marginalized students or improving their academic outcomes.

Like Claudine Gay at Harvard, most of those who promulgated the divisive DEI ideology on Texas campuses are still there. There is no indication that any Texas academic institution has fired anyone who formally held a DEI title. Like Gay, those who are committed to dividing students into either oppressors or oppressed based on their identity group still have their jobs. They have simply been moved around or given new titles.

The state of Texas put $43 billion into higher education in the last legislative session and Senate Bill 17 has only been in effect for a couple weeks. However, it is clear that it will take a much more comprehensive and serious effort to eradicate DEI from our academic institutions and return to the principles of real academic excellence – merit, vigilance, open inquiry, free speech and respect for people as individuals – not identity groups.

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Sherry Sylvester Show

The Sherry Sylvester Show | Ep 1: The War Against Texas History feat. Ken Wise

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with noted historian and host of the Wise About Texas podcast, Ken Wise, to discuss the importance of accurately remembering days gone by in order to secure a better future for us all.

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9th & Congress

2023 Set the Stage for Big Victories in 2024

It is not the best of times. Our country is so hopelessly and hatefully divided that we can’t even agree on enough facts to have a decent argument. Millions of people from all over the world are streaming across the border, it seems like half the country is marching in the streets in support of terrorists and the newest member of the U.S. Supreme Court is afraid to define what a woman is.

I had been thinking that 2023 would turn out to be worse than 2022, but as it draws to a close, I am feeling optimistic.

Looking back on the year through my newsletter and podcast — 9th & Congress—there are some clear signs that 2023 may prove to be a turning point that even the media can’t ignore. The world of irrational wokeness—critical race theory, gender identity and equity politics is beginning to crumble, and though it is far from over, there is a sense that we are at the beginning of the end.

Last month I wrote that the three Ivy League college presidents shocked America by their robotic failure to condemn the terrorist massacre of Jews on Oct. 7.

It was a stunning made-for-television moment that is serving as a wake-up call to every parent in America who is considering sending a child to college, because virtually all universities and college espouse the same Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) rubbish those college presidents spit out—even in Texas.

I reported that Texas A&M had its own “what could they possibly be thinking” moment when it hired a woke journalism professor to head up a new journalism school who stated, unequivocally, that some sides of a story should not be reported in the news:

“We can’t just give people a set of facts anymore. I think we know that and we have to tell our students that. This is not about getting two sides of a story or three sides of a story, if one side is illegitimate,” said Dr. Kathleen McElroy.  “I think now you cannot cover education, you cannot cover criminal justice, you can’t cover all of these institutions without recognizing how all these institutions were built.”

Guess who gets to decide which side is “illegitimate?”

At the University of Texas, I spoke with Professor Daniel Bonevac who had testified before the Texas Senate Higher Education Committee that DEI programs function like the “campus thought police” over on the vaunted “40 acres.”

Before Harvard President Claudine Gay embarrassed the oldest university in America in front of the whole country, Harvard had already made big news in 2023 when the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) found that it had the worst record for free speech of any college in America.  That’s why it was so laughable when Gay tried to pretend that “free speech” was the reason she didn’t condemn the protestors supporting Hamas. Laughably, Harvard had suddenly discovered free speech.

But the problem isn’t just at Harvard. We will learn in a couple days whether the University of Texas really has the No. 3 football team in the nation, but as I wrote last year, when it comes to free speech UT is rated number 236—almost as bad as Harvard, which is at the bottom of the list at 248.  Again, according to FIRE, excluding and shouting down conservative speakers is totally acceptable to the majority of Longhorn students.

spoke with Dr. Stanley Goldfarb, head of “Do No Harm,” which is fighting DEI in medical schools, who told me that some Texas medical schools are no longer looking at GPAs or requiring doctors to take MCAT tests before they are admitted apparently because the tests give an unfair advantage to the people who can pass the tests, regardless of their skin color or gender identity. Texans are not happy to learn this and changes will undoubtedly be made.

The biggest disappointment in 2023 was Texas’ failure to pass school choice, allowing parents to determine what school is best for their child. Just before the final legislative vote in October I wrote about what it has been like to watch this battle for over 20 years in Texas as teachers unions and their allies in the media fight parents and school choice. Though many of the legislators who led the fight against school choice are graduates of private schools and send their kids there, time and time again, they condemned poor and marginalized children to failing schools.

But one of the brightest spots in 2023 is the passage of one of the most important pieces of legislation in our modern history—Senate Bill 17, the anti-DEI bill by Senator Brandon Creighton, R-Conroe, which outlaws DEI offices on Texas public university campuses. When a bunch Texas professors threatened to leave the state after SB 17 passed, we all knew they weren’t going anywhere. They haven’t.

Our challenge in 2024 will be to ensure that Texas colleges and universities actually follow the new laws against DEI. So far, not much of what we are seeing is promising. I spoke with Carol Swain, Ph.D., about her latest book, “The Adversity of Diversity,” earlier this month. As a former tenured professor at Princeton who also taught at Vanderbilt, Carol predicted that the DEI bureaucracy will not give up without a fight, which is certainly what we are seeing at Texas universities.

Notably, Carol is one of the people whose work was plagiarized by Harvard’s President Gay. She wrote about it in the WSJ recently noting that the words Gay lifted from her book, “Black Faces, Black Interests: The Representation of African Americans in Congress” would have been familiar to others at Harvard who likely ignored the fact that Gay copied her work without attribution.

Much of what is wrong in education is linked to DEI, including its tie to Hamas, as we saw after the attacks on Israel and campuses exploded in support of the terrorists. I certainly wasn’t the only one who blamed DEI programs for the protests.

My colleagues Erin Valdez and Chuck DeVore presented a panel discussion on the “Woke Hamas Alliance” showing the depth of this long and dangerous partnership. We were joined on the panel by Rabbi Dan Ain.

It wasn’t long after Oct. 7 before it was easy to see that Hamas was using its own people to fight a media war. Civilian casualties aren’t collateral damage for Hamas, they are a feature of their strategic plan.  Now, almost 12 weeks later, they are obviously meeting with success as we see Biden waffling and many in the West flinching at the body count.

talked to Rabbi Ain again earlier this month about how his community is coping with the escalating war in Israel. He told me it had been difficult for many Jewish people to imagine that anti-Semitism wouldn’t be broadly condemned in America. As a native New Yorker who chose Texas as a refuge for himself and his family several years ago, Rabbi Ain’s observations on the war and the protests here are extremely insightful.

Of course, DEI is not only about Critical Race Theory and terrorism. It is also about something called “Gender Theory,” a topic you can major in at a couple of Texas universities. The end of the year fundraising appeal from the Texas Tribune, one of the state’s largest media outlets, assures us that it will continue to report on Texas priority issues in 2024 including “transgender rights.”

Last year, I reported exactly what Equality Texas, the leading advocate for so-called LGBTQ+, views some of those rights to be:

  • No restrictions on sex change surgery for children, which Equality Texas calls “lifesaving” and a “best [medical] practice.” No restrictions on cross-sex hormones and puberty blocking drugs.
  • All health care providers should be forced to provide sex change surgery to children whether the providers believe in them or not.
  • Insurance companies should be required to pay for sex change operations for children.
  • There should be no restrictions on classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity.
  • There should be no restrictions on classroom instruction using nudity and descriptions of sex.
  • Men should be allowed to play in women’s sports in Texas colleges and universities.

Equality Texas does not include a “right” to perform drag shows for children in public schools and libraries, although they insisted Texas legislature’s effort to restrict them was “life threatening.”

As a lifelong feminist, it continues to baffle me that there is no bigger outcry against drag shows, which are essentially a woman-focused version of blackface, which is universally condemned. In April I reported that the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture describes blackface this way:

“Minstrelsy, comedic performances of “blackness” by whites in exaggerated costumes and make-up, cannot be separated fully from the racial derision and stereotyping at its core. By distorting the features and culture of African Americans—including their looks, language, dance, deportment, and character—white Americans were able to codify whiteness across class and geopolitical lines as its antithesis.”

Change blackness to womanhood and you have a precise definition of drag shows —”comedic performances of women by men in exaggerated costumes and make-up…” As the Smithsonian notes, blackface “cannot be separated from racial derision and stereotyping at its core.” Similarly, drag shows are all about misogyny and utter contempt for women.

Texas passed a law to restrict drag shows in public libraries and in June I wrote that “Texas May Be Winning the War Against Woke.”  As 2023 winds down, it looks like the rest of the country is also having second thoughts about the woke worldview too and not just businesses like Bud Light and Target which learned that it just isn’t worth it to push distorted gender identities. Just this week, big woke tech companies like Google and Meta revealed they are pulling back. Nationally, DEI job postings are down 44%. That’s one more reason to be optimistic about 2024.

Another is that Texans have faced tough times before. In our recent history, it is important to remember that Texas has not always flourished and our state leaders have not always been conservatives. Conservatives did not take control of the Legislature until 2003, just 20 years ago.  That’s why I reached out to several people who were part of the effort to change Texas from blue to red, including nationally known pollster Mike Baselicemedia guru David Weeks and communications expert Ray Sullivan to learn how Texas got it right over two decades ago. Their stories say a lot about who Texans are and what they believe.

Then, as now, Texans want small government, individual liberty and freedom and governing principles that allow businesses to prosper and make our state a force in the global market.

They also want to protect our history from the woke forces of DEI.  The state of Texas is finally building a world-class history site at the Alamo after overcoming assaults from the “Forget the Alamo” crowd who want to deny that anything heroic happened there.

I talked with legendary Texan and historic preservationist J.P. Bryan who has been fighting that battle his entire life, making sure that left-wing historians don’t re-write our history to reflect their Marxist world view. Every Texan should be very grateful that J.P. hasn’t backed down from this fight. Next week I will host Judge Ken Wise, President of the Texas State Historical Association, on the podcast. It should be interesting, so listen in.

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick. Subscribe to her 9th & Congress newsletter to be the first to receive columns like this.